Accessibility helpSkip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footer
  • Sign In
  • Subscribe
Open side navigation menuOpen search bar
Financial Times
SubscribeSign In
  • Home
  • World
    Sections
    • World Home
    • Middle East war
    • Global Economy
    • UK
    • US
    • China
    • Africa
    • Asia Pacific
    • Emerging Markets
    • Europe
    • War in Ukraine
    • Americas
    • Middle East & North Africa
    Most Read
    • Iran warns of potential change in nuclear doctrine if Israel targets facilities
    • Florida surveys wreckage left by Hurricane Milton
    • US inflation fell to 2.4% in September
    • UK executives dump shares on fears of Labour capital gains tax raid
    • Why Kamala Harris chose to appear on the ‘Call Her Daddy’ podcast
  • UK
    Sections
    • UK Home
    • UK Economy
    • UK Politics
    • UK Companies
    • Personal Finance
    Most Read
    • UK executives dump shares on fears of Labour capital gains tax raid
    • Reeves weighs capital gains tax hike to help plug UK’s Budget gap
    • The battle of Labour’s three brains
    • Why are a rising number of young Britons out of work?
    • Ex-Darktrace head Poppy Gustafsson named UK investment minister
  • Companies
    Sections
    • Companies Home
    • Energy
    • Financials
    • Health
    • Industrials
    • Media
    • Professional Services
    • Retail & Consumer
    • Tech Sector
    • Telecoms
    • Transport
    Most Read
    • Starboard plotted a campaign against Pfizer’s chief. Then a blank email dropped in his inbox
    • Private equity groups’ assets struggling under hefty debt loads, Moody’s says
    • Stellantis unveils management shake-up at global car brands
    • The ‘80-hour circuit breaker’: Wall Street banks tackle workloads of junior staff
    • Why Kamala Harris chose to appear on the ‘Call Her Daddy’ podcast
  • Tech
    Sections
    • Tech Home
    • Artificial intelligence
    • Semiconductors
    • Cyber Security
    • Social Media
    Most Read
    • AMD rolls out new AI chip to rival Nvidia
    • Checking out of Hotel California
    • Why Big Tech makes such a poor babysitter
    • How Google plans to deflect and delay a historic break-up threat
    • Breaking up Google would be misguided
  • Markets
    Sections
    • Markets Home
    • Alphaville
    • Markets Data
    • Crypto
    • Capital Markets
    • Commodities
    • Currencies
    • Equities
    • Wealth Management
    • Moral Money
    • ETF Hub
    • Fund Management
    • Trading
    Most Read
    • How Russia’s ‘shadow fleet’ gets its ships
    • Warren criticises accounting watchdog over BDO audit failures
    • TD Bank to pay $3bn in US case over money laundering lapses
    • China’s real intent behind its stimulus inflection
    • Former UBS chief Ralph Hamers joins AI wealth management start-up
  • Climate
  • Opinion
    Sections
    • Opinion Home
    • Columnists
    • The FT View
    • The Big Read
    • Lex
    • Obituaries
    • Letters
    Most Read
    • Why Kamala Harris chose to appear on the ‘Call Her Daddy’ podcast
    • China’s real intent behind its stimulus inflection
    • No one but Moscow gains from Polish-Ukrainian tensions
    • How anime took over the world
    • The battle of Labour’s three brains
  • Lex
  • Work & Careers
    Sections
    • Work & Careers Home
    • Business School Rankings
    • Business Education
    • Europe's Start-Up Hubs
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Recruitment
    • Business Books
    • Business Travel
    • Working It
    Most Read
    • The ‘80-hour circuit breaker’: Wall Street banks tackle workloads of junior staff
    • Trump pledges to end double taxation for expat Americans
    • Herman Chinery-Hesse, tech entrepreneur, 1963-2024
    • Labour must keep listening to business
    • A chef’s guide to London’s top Sunday lunches
  • Life & Arts
    Sections
    • Life & Arts Home
    • Arts
    • Books
    • Food & Drink
    • FT Magazine
    • House & Home
    • Style
    • Travel
    • FT Globetrotter
    Most Read
    • South Korean author Han Kang wins Nobel literature prize
    • How anime took over the world
    • The Ritz, London: Is this where I fall back in love with fine dining? — review 
    • Introducing Ventete, the world’s first inflatable bike helmet
    • Peter Schlesinger: ‘It was drug-ridden back then — but a wonderful place’
  • HTSI
  1. Life & Arts
  2. Books
  3. Fiction
MenuSearch
  • Home
  • World
  • UK
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Markets
  • Climate
  • Opinion
  • Lex
  • Work & Careers
  • Life & Arts
  • HTSI
Financial Times
SubscribeSign In

Fiction

  • Thursday, 10 October, 2024
    Meet Han Kang, winner of 2024’s Nobel Prize for literature
    South Korean author Han Kang wins Nobel literature prize

    Award comes against a backdrop of growing international appreciation of her country’s culture

    Han Kang
  • Thursday, 10 October, 2024
    Books
    Meet Han Kang, winner of 2024’s Nobel Prize for literature

    The South Korean author won 2016’s Man Booker International Prize for her novel ‘The Vegetarian’. This pick of FT reviews and interviews looks back at her other books

  • Wednesday, 9 October, 2024
    Nilanjana Roy
    Why illness in fiction is going viral

    A renewed focus on pandemics, sanatoriums and troubled minds reveals much about the state of our times

    A first-person view of a hospital patient looking down at his legs in a hospital bed wearing pajamas
  • Wednesday, 9 October, 2024
    Review
    Playground by Richard Powers — an ambitious deep dive

    The American writer blends ocean exploration and social technology in his Booker-longlisted novel

    An illustration of a diver underwater. There are fish and a turtle in the water as well as two reefs shaped like human heads
  • Tuesday, 8 October, 2024
    Review
    The Women Behind the Door — the return of Roddy Doyle’s heroine

    A third outing for Paula Spencer sees her hard-fought lockdown peace disrupted by the arrival of a middle-aged daughter

    A woman takes a picture of a red mural of a woman’s face in Dublin’s Grand Canal area
  • Tuesday, 8 October, 2024
    The Booker Prize 2024
    Stone Yard Devotional — Booker Prize-shortlisted novel is transfixing on the weight of childhood

    Australian writer Charlotte Wood has penned a resonant novel that takes on fundamental questions about life

    Two nuns, viewed from above, walk along a path next to a building with stained-glass windows
  • Friday, 4 October, 2024
    ReviewBooks
    The best books of the week

    An urgent call to guard against tyranny; Kremlin propaganda and the complicity of Russia’s Orthodox Church; far-right white nationalism in America’s hinterlands; the Rillington Place murders and women’s lives in postwar Britain; David Spiegelhalter on the role of luck and chance; inside the artists’ studios (and their minds); new novels by Alan Hollinghurst, Rumaan Alam and Clare Chambers — plus Gideon Rachman’s pick of politics titles

  • Thursday, 3 October, 2024
    The best books of the week
    Our Evenings by Alan Hollinghurst — a gay coming-of-age novel

    Spanning the arc of the author’s own life, this personal progress is by turns drolly self-mocking, mischievously randy and touchingly vulnerable

    An illustration of a boy in a white shirt at a dinning table. There are people standing in front of him and, behind, a chef is in the kitchen
  • Wednesday, 2 October, 2024
    The best books of the week
    Entitlement by Rumaan Alam — the dark side of the American dream

    A young woman’s noble ambitions are compromised by the corrupting influence of money

    A woman walks along a train platform
  • Tuesday, 1 October, 2024
    The best books of the week
    Shy Creatures by Clare Chambers — art and psychiatry in postwar Britain

    The author follows her acclaimed 2020 novel ‘Small Pleasures’ with a portrait of extraordinary lives in 1960s suburbia

  • Friday, 27 September, 2024
    The Booker Prize 2024
    The Safekeep — a thrilling Booker-shortlisted debut

    Yael van der Wouden’s novel is powerful tale of buried guilt, repressed desire and the lasting dispossessions of the Holocaust

    A picture of a hare painted on a broken fragment of crockery
  • Friday, 27 September, 2024
    Review
    The Many Lives of Syeda X — life at the bottom of Delhi’s pyramid

    Neha Dixit’s vivid chronicle of an urban migrant’s struggle to survive plays out against the backdrop of modern India

    Women labourers clean and sort raisins at a market
  • Thursday, 26 September, 2024
    Review
    The Mighty Red — the bitter taste of failed crops and doomed relationships

    Flawed characters and toxic chemicals are woven together in Louise Erdrich’s story of three families in a Dakota farming community

    A discarded bottle of alcohol sits on the ground outside some prefab homes
  • Thursday, 26 September, 2024
    Review
    The Empusium — Olga Tokarczuk’s carnivalesque homage to Thomas Mann

    The Nobel laureate cements her reputation as one of the great storytellers of our age

    An abstract artwork featuring a dark, looming hand encircling a group of figures dressed in blue suits. In the background, a red castle-like building sits among green trees under a starry night sky with a crescent moon
  • Monday, 23 September, 2024
    ReviewScience fiction books
    From London’s netherworld to a techno-chiller — the best new sci-fi books

    Alan Moore starts a five-part series set in the capital, plus a mixed-bag 1970s anthology and a lavish Michael McDowell reissue

  • Thursday, 19 September, 2024
    Review
    Intermezzo by Sally Rooney — an engrossing study of the male psyche

    The Irish writer’s keenly intelligent new novel swaps her formidable female leads for two brothers summoned together by grief

    An illustration of a man’s head in transparent blue, with pharmaceutical pills floating within the image, which intersects with a woman’s head in transparent purple which has chess pieces overlayed, with the silhouette of a man layered behind them
  • Thursday, 19 September, 2024
    ReviewBooks
    The Last Dream by Pedro Almodóvar — a life in fragments

    An uneven collection of writing by the Spanish filmmaker veers from deep personal reflection to cartoonish absurdity

  • Tuesday, 17 September, 2024
    Review
    Gabriel’s Moon by William Boyd — a cold war retro-thriller

    A travel writer is drawn into a world of espionage from Congo to the eastern bloc in this portrait of a vanished era

  • Monday, 16 September, 2024
    The Booker Prize 2024
    Diverse Booker prize shortlist explores faultlines of our times

    Some big names missing from a final six that includes the largest number of female authors in the fiction prize’s history

  • Monday, 16 September, 2024
    Review
    Teen troubles and a cowboy on a camel: the pick of new debut fiction

    Exciting first novels cover themes from America’s racial divide to writing as therapy — and riding to the rescue in the Iraqi desert

  • Friday, 13 September, 2024
    Nilanjana Roy
    Why Elsa Morante’s work still resonates today

    On the 50th anniversary of her bestselling novel La Storia, we remember a writer inextricably linked to Italian political history

    A woman stands by a framed drawing of a cat, with a shelf of books visible behind her
  • Friday, 13 September, 2024
    Review
    Elaine by Will Self — maternal instincts

    The author’s latest book, inspired by the intimate diaries kept by his mother, Elaine, is arguably his most mature novel yet

    An illustration of a woman in a black dress wearing blue gloves and a hat. She is sitting at a table with a glass of wine and a fan in her hand
  • Thursday, 12 September, 2024
    Review
    Small Rain by Garth Greenwell — the boundary between fiction and life

    The American writer continues the story of his auto-fictional alter-ego amid a devastating mid-life illness

    Feet sticking out of the end of a hospital bed
  • Monday, 9 September, 2024
    Review
    Best new crime books — from an Icelandic cold case to injustice in Trump’s America

    The latest novels from Attica Locke, Linwood Barclay, Simon Mason and more

    Three book jackets: A Violent Heart, Death at the Sanitorium and I Will Ruin You
  • Thursday, 5 September, 2024
    Review
    If Only by Vigdis Hjorth — an unsettling, addictive love story

    The Norwegian author’s dark novel underscores how love and suffering are often bedmates

    A couple, seen from above, walk  hand in hand across a sunny, empty pavement
Previous page You are on page 1 Next page

Useful links

Support

View Site TipsHelp CentreContact UsAbout UsAccessibilitymyFT TourCareers

Legal & Privacy

Terms & ConditionsPrivacy PolicyCookie PolicyManage CookiesCopyrightSlavery Statement & Policies

Services

Share News Tips SecurelyIndividual SubscriptionsProfessional SubscriptionsRepublishingExecutive Job SearchAdvertise with the FTFollow the FT on XFT ChannelsFT Schools

Tools

PortfolioFT AppFT Digital EditionFT EditAlerts HubBusiness School RankingsSubscription ManagerNews feedNewslettersCurrency Converter

Community & Events

FT Live EventsFT ForumsBoard Director Programme

More from the FT Group

Markets data delayed by at least 15 minutes. © THE FINANCIAL TIMES LTD 2024. FT and ‘Financial Times’ are trademarks of The Financial Times Ltd.
The Financial Times and its journalism are subject to a self-regulation regime under the FT Editorial Code of Practice.
Edition:UK
International
Subscribe for full access

Top sections

  • Home
  • World
    • Middle East war
    • Global Economy
    • UK
    • US
    • China
    • Africa
    • Asia Pacific
    • Emerging Markets
    • Europe
    • War in Ukraine
    • Americas
    • Middle East & North Africa
  • UK
    • UK Economy
    • UK Politics
    • UK Companies
    • Personal Finance
  • Companies
    • Energy
    • Financials
    • Health
    • Industrials
    • Media
    • Professional Services
    • Retail & Consumer
    • Tech Sector
    • Telecoms
    • Transport
  • Tech
    • Artificial intelligence
    • Semiconductors
    • Cyber Security
    • Social Media
  • Markets
    • Alphaville
    • Markets Data
    • Crypto
    • Capital Markets
    • Commodities
    • Currencies
    • Equities
    • Wealth Management
    • Moral Money
    • ETF Hub
    • Fund Management
    • Trading
  • Climate
  • Opinion
    • Columnists
    • The FT View
    • The Big Read
    • Lex
    • Obituaries
    • Letters
  • Lex
  • Work & Careers
    • Business School Rankings
    • Business Education
    • Europe's Start-Up Hubs
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Recruitment
    • Business Books
    • Business Travel
    • Working It
  • Life & Arts
    • Arts
    • Books
    • Food & Drink
    • FT Magazine
    • House & Home
    • Style
    • Travel
    • FT Globetrotter
  • Personal Finance
    • Property & Mortgages
    • Investments
    • Pensions
    • Tax
    • Banking & Savings
    • Advice & Comment
    • Next Act
  • HTSI
  • Special Reports

FT recommends

  • Alphaville
  • FT Edit
  • Lunch with the FT
  • FT Globetrotter
  • #techAsia
  • Moral Money
  • Visual and data journalism
  • Newsletters
  • Video
  • Podcasts
  • News feed
  • FT Schools
  • FT Live Events
  • FT Forums
  • Board Director Programme
  • myFT
  • Portfolio
  • FT Digital Edition
  • Crossword
  • Our Apps
  • Help Centre
  • Subscribe
  • Sign In